Title: RELEVANCE OF LISBON AGENDA
1 RELEVANCE OF LISBON AGENDA AND EDUCATION FOR
WESTERN BALKANS COUNTRIES
Višnja Samardžija, PhD Institute for
International Relations Zagreb, 2007.
2Content of presentation
- The revised Lisbon Strategy
- Goals, priorities, achievments
- Instruments and activities
- Education goals of Lisbon
- How are the WB countries prepared to approach
Lisbon strategy goals? - Strategic documents
- Institutional aspects
- Implementing mechanisms
- Benchmarking
3The Lisbon Strategy starting points
- The Lisbon goals
- Lisbon European Council, 2000 to become the
most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based
economy in the world by 2010, capable of
sustainable economic growth with more and better
jobs and greater social cohesion - The redefined Lisbon strategy
- Working together for growth and jobs A new
start for the Lisbon Strategy (March 2005)
4Priorities revised Lisbon
1. Making Europe a more attractive place to invest and work 1. Extend and deepen the internal market 2. Ensure open and competitive markets inside and outside Europe 3. Improve European and national regulation 4. Expand and improve European infrastructure
2. Knowledge and innovations as driwing forces of growth 5. Increase and improve investment in Research and Development 6. Facilitate innovation, the uptake of ICT and the sustainable use of resources 7. Contribute to a strong European industrial base
3. Creating more and better jobs 8. Attract more people into employment and modernise social protection systems 9. Improve the adaptability of workers and enterprises and the flexibility of labour markets 10. Invest more in human capital through better education and skills.
5Lisbon priority areas for action
- European Spring Council, 2006
- Investing more in knowledge and innovation
- Unlocking business potential, especially of SMEs
- Getting people into work
- Efficient, secure and sustainable energy
61. Investing more in knowledge and innovation
- Promote polices and actions aiming to achiev 3
objective for RD spending by 2010 - Adopt FP7 and CIP Programme
- Establish European Research Council aimed at
raising excellence of the best research teams - Create single, competitive and open European
labour market for researchers - Develop a broad-based information strategy for
Europe that translates investment in knowledge
into products and services - Develop a comprehensive Lifelong Learning
strategies (MS) and EU Lifelong Learning
Programme 2007-2013 - Facilitate universities access to complementary
sources of funding - Develop managerial skill and competencies for the
people involved to transfer the research results
to business community
72. Unlocking business potential, especially of
SMEs
- Develop national strategies to foster
competitiveness, innovation and productivity - Explore options for establishing measurable
targets in specific sectors for reducing
administrative burdens by 2006 - Establish by the end of 2007 a one-stop-shop or
arrangements with equivalent effect - Reduce the average time for setting up a
business, especially an SME, with objective of
being able to do this within one week anywhere in
the EU by the end of 2007 - recruitment of a first employee should not
involve more than one public administration
point.
83. Getting people into work
- Reduce unemployment, adopt a real lifecycle
approach to employment by - reducing early school leaving for 10 by 2010
- 85 of 22 years old should have completed upper
secondary education - offering job to every young person who has left
school / university or additional training within
six months of becoming unemployed by the end of
2007, and within 4 months by 2010 - implementing policies to promote womens
employment approved the European Pact for Gender
Equality - increasing availability of quality childcare in
line with MS own national targets - implementing active ageing strategies, incentives
for prolonging working lives, gradual retirement,
use of part-time work and improvements to the
working environment - pursuing reforms by MSs in labour market and
social policies - establishing the European Globalisation
Adjustment Fund (1 January 2007)
9Obligations of the EU and member states
- EU
- Community Lisbon Programme
- New Integrated guidelines for growth and
employment - Annual Progress report
- Coordination of implementation
- Member states
- National Reform Programmes (NRPs)
- National Lisbon coordinators
- Implementation!!!
10Stronger implementing mechanisms?
- Integrated guidelines for growth and employment
- Macroeconomic
- Microeconomic
- Employment guidelines
- Open method of coordination (OMC)
- Soft approach - evaluation, monitoring, reporting
- Exchange of best practice instruments
- Peer reviews
- Quantitative and qualitative indicators
- benchmarks, scoreboards
- Process of mutual learning aiming to develop
coherent policies - Competitiveness reports, or composite indicators
on knowledge society in areas such as RD and
human capital
11The framework of indicators and benhmarks for
monitoring
- Improving quality of education and training
- Promoting efficiency in education and training
- Making lifelong learnig a reality
- Key competences among young people
- Modernising school education, vocational
education and training - Modernising higher education (Bologna process)
- Employability !!!
12Convergence towards common EU goals
- Strategy
- Policy
- Action Plan
- Capacity
- Legal framework
- Human capital
- Physical capital
- Equipment/infrastr.
- expenditure
- Commitment to reforms
- Adopting Lisbon instruments
- Measures, deadlines, implementing bodies
- Social dialogue, partnership
- Implementation!
13Lisbon strategy and candidates
- Barcelona Summit (2002)
- Lisbon Strategy incentive for candidates to
implement objectives as a two-way learning
process - Western Balkans
- Lisbon objectives do not constitute additional
criteria - ...but, Lisbon objectives reflected in EU
policies towards region in areas that can be
considered priorities under European/Accession
Partnerships - Lisbon strategy priorities should be differently
interpreted by each country (considering level of
development, individual stage of rapprochement to
EU) - Implemenation of Lisbon goals complementary to
fulfilment of Copenhagen criteria
14Implementation of revised Lisbon strategy ... and
candidates
European Commission European
Council Eur. Parliament EESC Comm.of Regions Soc.
partners
REVISED LISBON STRATEGY
Member States (25)
But...EU policies towards WB region reflect
Lisbon activities that can be considered as
priorities under European/Accession Partnerships
Lisbon objectives are not additional EU criteria!
Candidate countries ... WB countries
Implemenating Lisbon goals - complementary to
fulfilling Copenhagen criteria
15Croatia (towards) implementing Lisbon goals
- Croatia does not have a coherent Lisbon Action
Plan - Some of the aims and activities leading to its
implementation introduced in different strategic
documents - Strategic Development Framework (2006-13) adopted
- National Programme for Integration into EU
(anually) - Science and Technology Policy 2006-10
- 55 Recommendations for Raising Croatias
Competitiveness - Programme of Incentives for SME (2004-08)
Operative plan (2006) - Croatian Programme for Innovative Technological
Development - National Strategy for Development of Intellectual
Property (2005-10) - ... other
- Existing documents cover only partly Lisbon
agenda - Need for development operational action
plan/plans for implementing Lisbon goals - targets, instruments, dealines, responsibilities
16Benchmarks
- Indicators only partly registered by national
statistics bureaus - Need to further develop system of collecting and
monitoring qualitative and quantitative
indicators - Example
- Innovation benchmark - rather weak and
underdeveloped area, lack of resources (financial
support, man-power, premises) - Activities in progress preparations for
participation in EU benchmark programmes and
system of monitoring indicators (EU benchmark
programmes for innovation) - Support from the PHARE programme
17Ranking and Scores of Potential EU Member
Countires
Source World Economic Forum. The Lisbon Review
2006. Measuring Europes Progress in Reform.
18RD investing more in knowledge and innovation
- Need to increase the overall RD investment (EU
goal 3 of GDP by 2010, of which 2/3 from private
sector) - Developing Action Plan for increasing RD
expenditure - identify RD targeted level of expenditure for
RD (eg. Croatia 2 in 2010, share 11) - develop overall strategy to achieve targets,
coordinated measures, actions, monitoring
mechanisms - Expenditure on RD low
- Croatia 1,28 of GDP (EU average 1.9)
- targeted share public/private sector 12
- Need to participate in the OMC in favor of the 3
objective (CREST) - Innovation - positive (but limited) results
achieved - HITRA, Croatian Programme for Innovative
Technological Development - should be coordinated with measures involving all
the components of the National Innovation System
(NIS)
19 Completion of upper secondary education of
population (20-24) that have completed
educationEuropean Benchmark 85
Source Eurostat (Labour Force Survey) Progress
towards the Lisbon Objectives in Education and
Training Report 2006, 16.05.2006.
20Number of tertiary graduates in MST (mathematics
and technical studies) per 1000 inhabitants, aged
20-29 European Benchmark ? 15(Ireland, France,
UK)
Croatia 5,4
Source Eurostat Progress towards the Lisbon
Objectives in Education and Training Report
2006, 16.05.2006.
21Total public expenditure on education ( GDP,
2000 - 2002)
Izvor Eurostat Progress towards the Lisbon
Objectives in Education and Training Report
2006, 16.05.2006
Croatia Present expenditure 4.4 Target 4.9
22Expenditure for education from private
sources(GDP, 2000 - 2002)
Source Eurostat Progress towards the Lisbon
Objectives in Education and Training Report
2006, 16.05.2006.
23Expenditure in education sector - WB countries
- Education sector in WB countries reflects
handicap of small economies in achieving
economies of scale - Smallest economies have the highest levels of
expenditure in education (Kosovo 5.7 of GDP,
Montenegro 5, others 3) - the trend is revised when considering results
attainded! - Enrolment ratios all WB countries present
similar level in primary and secondary enrolment
ration, the largest countries show the highest
level in tertiary education (50 Serbia, 13.6
Montenegro, Croatia)
24All enrolments in higher education, independent
of age, as a percentage of 20-24 year old in
population(Poland, Baltics, Slovenia
strongest growth)
Izvor Eurostat Progress towards the Lisbon
Objectives in Education and Training Report
2006, 16.05.2006
25 Participation in vocational stream of upper
secondary education,( of pupils in upper
secondary education enrolled in vocational
stream)
Source Eurostat Progress towards the Lisbon
Objectives in Education and Training Report
2006, 16.05.2006.
26Strengthening competitiveness unlocking business
potential (SMEs)
- Example of CROATIA
- Introducing one-stop-shop concept
- HITRO.HR service
- shortening the duration procedure of establishing
a company (six days) - HITRORez
- Web page Business Navigator (June 2006)
- Competitiveness barometer (NCC, 2006)
27Business Navigator, Croatia
28Global competitiveness index
- Global Competitiveness Report (GCR)
- Croatia included in 2002
- International Economic Forum
- Davos NVK
- benchmarking
- Comparison with 104 world countries
- Position of Croatia, GCR 2006/07
- ? competitiveness growth index 51/104 (64 in
2005, behind new MS, but better than Bulgaria,
Romania, Turkey) - ? business competitiveness index 56 instead of
65 - Imperative to increase competitiveness!
29Lessons for WB countries
- Lisbon strategy is not obligatory for candidate
- voluntary adoption of good practice
- Identification of own priorities
- respecting national and regional differences,
defining specific, individual goals - Negotiations on EU membership
- prioritisation of the Lisbon strategy goals in
defferent area (RD) - participation in implementig mechanism (OMC)
- Adopting best practice of new MS (National Reform
Programmes) - Croatia best positioned as compared with EU
candidates - transfer the knowledge to WBc
30Conclusions
- Lisbon strategy goals remain the main reform
framework for EU, relevant for WBc - Raising awareness and understanding on Lisbon
goals and implementation mechanisms during
accession process necessary - Prioritisation and seequencing goals according
individual situation and needs - Development of the system of collecting and
monitoring qualitative and quantitative
indicators necessary, corresponding to structural
indicators (EUROSTAT) - Adopting best practice
- Lisbon Action Plans not dseveloped in the region,
- mix of policies exist that work in the same
direction. But, they are neither fully coherent
nor coordinated - Imited progress made, stronger efforts needed